The Wartburg near Eisenach - the myth about oath swords
- Written by Portal Editor
The Wartburg, located high above the city of Eisenach in Thuringia, is connected to the history of Germany like hardly any other castle in Germany.
The Wartburg was also one of our destinations, which we approached as part of a day excursion from Billroda. The Wartburg was founded by Ludwig the Springer around 1067, is a guard castle according to the name "Warte" and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1999. From 1211 to 1227 Elisabeth of Thuringia, who was later canonized, lived in the castle. In 1521/22 the reformer Martin Luther hid here as “Junker Jörg” and during this time he translated the New Testament of the Bible (“September Testament”) into German in just eleven weeks. We will report on this in more detail later. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe stayed here several times, for the first time in 1777. On October 18, 1817, on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of Martin Luther's theses (October 31, 1517) and in commemoration of the Battle of Leipzig (16. until October 19, 1813) the first Wartburg Festival took place at the castle. The second Wartburg Festival was held in the revolutionary year of 1848. So it is not surprising that the castle was already a national monument in the 19th century.
However, the current appearance of the Wartburg is largely to be understood as a new building from the 19th century including less preserved parts, which can be traced back to the Grand Duke Carl Alexander of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach.
Legendary swords of the Wartburg
According to the legend retold by Ludwig Bechstein, Count Ludwig der Springer was tricked into becoming the owner of the mountain on which the Wartburg was to be built.
It was Count Ludwig, the Springer, a powerful gentleman in Thuringia. When he once hunted on the Inselberg, he met a piece of game that he eagerly pursued, and rode after him as far as the Hörsel river, and as far as Nieder-Eisenach, and from there back to the mountain, on which the Wartburg now stands. There he stayed and wanted to wait where the game ran out of the forest, meanwhile looked at the beautiful area and especially the steep rocky mountain, and thought to himself and said: "Wait, Berg, you should become a castle for me!" Desire to build on the mountain, he sought ways and means to begin it properly, because the mountain belonged to the Lords of Frankenstein, who already owned a castle nearby, called the Mittelstein, (and this was the best before the Wartburg Castle in Thuringia,) but had their ancestral castle on the other side of the forest near Salzungen just above the Werra.
The legend has been remembered as an example of medieval jurisprudence and Ludovingian family history.
The "Swords of Oath" bring restoration to light
Origin of the oath swords from the Iron Age
The other ten pieces of iron are from an Iron Age depot find, which is probably more than 1000 years older than the traditional founding date of the Wartburg. There is also no evidence whether the 10 iron bars come from the Wartburg or from a previously unknown site in Germany. The Siegerland is considered to be the production area for such goods.
Burg und Kaiserpfalz in der Kleinstadt Allstedt
Rentina Castle - Roman Via Egnatia towards Kavala
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Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther -
Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther -
Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther -
Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther -
Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther -
Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther Wartburg next to Eisenach - Luther
https://www.alaturka.info/en/germany/thuringia/5433-the-wartburg-near-eisenach-the-myth-about-the-oath-swords/amp#sigProIdfaa391c1ee